Report Back from BeaverCON 2024

WATER Institute Co-Directors Kate Lundquist and Brock Dolman were grateful for the opportunity to attend BeaverCON 2024 in Boulder, Colorado, last month. This renowned international gathering of beaver and process-based restoration experts is produced by our partners at The Beaver Institute and happens in a different US city every two years. It will be held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2026.

The BeaverCON 2024 logo illustrated by Ray Art features species that occur in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Products bearing this logo are available here (all proceeds go to the Beaver Institute). Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC

This sold-out three-day conference was bookended by workshops and tours of nearby restoration sites and coexistence strategies. Nearly 500 attendees from tribal nations, NGOs, agencies, academia, foundations, restoration companies and other entities came from all over North America and Europe to learn about best practices from one another. In addition to having the Governor of Colorado come speak, California Natural Resource Agency Secretary Wade Crowfoot gave an inspiring keynote address.

California Natural Resources Agency Secretary Wade Crowfoot poses for a selfie with Pamela Flick from California Defenders of Wildlife and Kate and Brock of OAEC. Photo: Wade Crowfoot / CA Department of Natural Resources

Highlights included getting to see California partners from The Tule River Tribe, the Maidu Summit Consortium, The Yurok Tribe, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Defenders of Wildlife, and the SLO Beaver Brigade participating in the conference. Another highlight was getting to reconnect with and meet new partners from the United Kingdom and Germany. We are excited about the prospect of reuniting next September 2025 at the 10th International Beaver Symposium in Inverness, Scotland.

This conference provides a critically important venue for sharing ideas and dreaming up new beaver restoration strategies with participants from the northern hemisphere. We all have so much to learn from one another’s successes and challenges. Brock and Kate were grateful to have been given an opportunity to talk about the long game they have been playing over the past twenty years to win their Bring Back the Beaver campaign.

Brock Dolman and Kate Lundquist present at BeaverCON 2024. (Photo: Pamela Flick / Defenders of Wildlife)
(Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC)

In addition to getting to share our work with this amazing audience, we got to help facilitate a “power mapping” exercise in collaboration with the Beaver Institute’s National Policy and Management Working Group. Power mapping has been a very successful and strategic tool OAEC uses to determine who we need to get to say “yes” to help us achieve our beaver restoration and other goals.

BeaverCON attendees participate in a “power mapping” exercise as part of a session led by OAEC and the Beaver Institute’s National Policy and Management Working Group. (Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC)
Check out this local news feature about how BeaverCON brought people from around the country to Boulder, Colorado.
OAEC and other BeaverCON participants took a tour with Sarah Marshall, an ecohydrologist at Colorado State University’s Colorado Natural Heritage Program, and Preston Brown from the Boulder Watershed Collective of various sites on Boulder Creek, including the Arapaho Ranch area in nearby Nederland, Colorado. This beaver wetland habitat offers a firsthand look at the successes and failures of beaver management, restoration, and coexistence. (Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC)
Kate and Brock in front of a beaver pond on the Arapaho Ranch near Nederland, CO. (Photo: Britt Van Zelst / Wageningen University and Research, Netherlands)
Beaver dam on the Arapaho Ranch near Nederland, CO. (Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC)
Beaver dam on Boulder Creek near Nederland, CO. (Photo: Brock Dolman / OAEC)
Brock and Kate in front of a beaver dam on Boulder Creek near Nederland, CO. (Photo: BeaverCON participant)

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